Isabelle and Therese

Victor Sjostrom

Victor SeastromSwedish Silent Film
More properly the headlines should read, "Garbo Talks, Seastrom Returns Home." Victor Seastrom, who had worked in the Swedish theater before pioneering in Swedish Film, returned to Sweden with the advent of the sound film, not to direct, but to act. As in Hollywood, the exterior of the Swedish landscape that had established Sjostrom, Stiller and Molander during the golden age of Swedish Silent Film, had taken the innovation of sound back to the proscenium arc of the interior with Molander managing the transition to dialogue centered films.

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

emailed to the present author by Mark A AVieira, author of Greta Garbo, A Cinematic Legacy

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo Scanned from the original negative and emailed to the present author by Mark A Vieira

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo original negative emailed from author of Greta Garbo, A Cinematic Legacy

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo from original negative

Greta Garbo

Scanned from the original negative and emailed to the present author by Mark A Vieira

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo Scanned from original negative, emailed by the author of Greta Garbo, A Cinematic Legacy

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo in Wild Orchids scanned from original negative

Greta Garbo

"More to have fun with", Scanned from the original negative and emailed to the present author by Mark A Vieira

Greta Garbo

among the photos emailed from the author of Greta Garbo, A Cinematic Legacy

Greta Garbo

among the photos Of Greta Garbo emailed by the author of Greta Garbo, A Cinematic Legacy

Greta Garbo

emailed from author of Greta Garbo, A Cinematic Legacy

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo emailed by Mark A Vieira

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo with Director Clarence Bown

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo photo:sfi

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo photo:sfi

Greta Garbo

photo credit sfi sweden

Greta Garbo

Greta Garbo photo:sfi

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Swedish Silent Film

Victor Sjostrom

While writing about the film Wild Strawberries, director Jorn Donner notes that Ingmar Bergman's film is in part a tribute to Victor Sjostrom the director,"Many scenes have a tie-in with Victor Sjsotrom's work. A smashed watch plays a part in Karin Ingmarsdottar."

Following Greta Garbo, Scandinavian Film

A sincere thank you to each of the several Danish professors involved in the fantastic online course on Scandinavian Film and Television given by Professor Ib Bondeberg offered by the University of Copenhagen

Greta Garbo

Vivtor Sjostrom travelled from Sweden to direct Greta Garbo and Lars Hanson in The Divine Woman under the name of Victor Seastrom. The film is considered lost, there being no existing copies of the film other that a fairly recently discovered fragment. Sjostrom's photographer for the film was Oliver Marsh.
Greta Garbo

Victor Sjostrom

Victor Sjostrom

Several of the films directed by Victor Sjostrom use artistic experiments in camera technique conducive to conveying symbolic meaning and dramatically charged images, among them being Masks of the Devil, with John Gilbert, and the earlier Kiss of Death, made in Sweden. Victor Sjostrom had begun on stage as an actor in Sweden and appears both on screen as well as from behind the camera. it is an obvious tribute to The Phantom Carriage that Ingmar Bergman includes the actor Victor Sjostrom in a symbolic scene during Wild Strawberries. In his autobiography Images, Ingmar Berman regrets that his workbook to the screenplay to Wild Strawberries had been lost, but he continues to acknowledge the influence of Sjostrom as a director while he moved "spontaneously between different planes-time-space,dream-reality....the hearse that overturns with the coffin bursting open."
Silent Film Victor Sjostrom